? NEW CONSTRUCTIVE POLICY 83
which was only 20 per cent. dead weight and 80 per cent.
earnings, you can see that science and invention and research
have made progress in the railroad industry as in all other
industry.
When you measure the progress of these railroads by those
tests which we normally apply to test the efficiency of indus-
try, you find in the transportation service in 1913, 166,000
ton miles moved per employee; in 1922, 243,000 ton miles
moved per employee; in 1913, 19,000 passenger miles per
employee, and in 1922, 21,600.
It is manifest that the standard of living can only be
advanced and maintained by the creation of more and more
articles for division among American Homes.
[t is manifest that this increasing volume must press into
more and more homes, facilitated by the economies of costs
which mass production itself secures, and aided in its distri-
bution by more widely distributed buying power, which
enlarged competition for workers itself assures.
It is, however, necessary and proper that, with this dem-
onstration of vast increase in material wealth, we should
make sure that such wealth is fairly and equitably distributed,
not by law and edict, with all the inequalities and injustices
which follow such application of human judgment in author-
ity, but that it be fairly and equitably distributed by the social
system and the natural processes of trade in which individual
superiority obtains its reward by the attraction of superior
service.
REVOLUTIONARY CHANGES IN ATTITUDE OF FINANCIERS,
INDUSTRIALISTS, AND LABOR LEADERS -
These significant statements as to fundamental changes
necessary in theory and practise in considering the reha-
bilitation of industry and the compensation and living
standards of industrial workers, were accepted by other
representative leaders of industry and of public opinion,
and soon met with widespread sanction and action, includ-